Good stuff!
I remember CP/M, and like the original VW Bug, it's strength was in its 
simplicity, fewer bells and whistles to go wrong.  Makes me nostalgic for the 
days of DOS 3.2 and rebuilding your own carburator on the back porch. 
Outside of turning M$ spin-doctoring back on the Redmond gang, it does make a 
nice argument for keeping things simple. Something that Microsoft forgot and 
can go a long way in promoting the stability of Linux and UNIX. I have to use 
NT at work and find it necessary to administer Brain Enemas to my workstation 
anywhere from two times a week to three times a day. It gets so bogged that 
it won't even shut down, so I have to yank the power cord. I have yet to see 
that happen with a UNIX or Linux box. Likewise, Windows NT is the only OS 
that I can bring to its knees with a corrupted Excel file or just by 
composing an e-mail in  MS-Exchange.  Either M$ is peddling defective 
products, or I'm a better saboteur than I thought I was. 
Let us know when this guy makes his comparison of Windows NT to a brick. I 
could use a few more laughs. 
On Friday 23 November 2001 15:16, you wrote:
> I think some of you will appreciate it.
>
> This is yet another entirely objective benchmark result of a
> Microsoft product vs. some little known O/S.
> Even if you have never used either O/S in this comparison, it's still
> good for a smile.
>
> http://www.oualline.com/col/cpm.html
>
> Bill
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